Bat conservation and zoonotic disease risk: a research agenda to prevent misguided persecution in the aftermath of COVID‐19.

Autor: Rocha, R.1,2 (AUTHOR) ricardo.nature@gmail.com, Aziz, S. A.3 (AUTHOR), Brook, C. E.4 (AUTHOR), Carvalho, W. D.5 (AUTHOR), Cooper‐Bohannon, R.6,7 (AUTHOR), Frick, W. F.8,9 (AUTHOR), Huang, J. C.‐C.10 (AUTHOR), Kingston, T.11 (AUTHOR), López‐Baucells, A.12 (AUTHOR), Maas, B.13,14 (AUTHOR), Mathews, F.15 (AUTHOR), Medellin, R. A.16 (AUTHOR), Olival, K. J.17 (AUTHOR), Peel, A. J.18 (AUTHOR), Plowright, R. K.19 (AUTHOR), Razgour, O.20 (AUTHOR), Rebelo, H.1,2 (AUTHOR), Rodrigues, L.21 (AUTHOR), Rossiter, S. J.22 (AUTHOR), Russo, D.23 (AUTHOR)
Předmět:
Zdroj: Animal Conservation. Jun2021, Vol. 24 Issue 3, p303-307. 5p.
Abstrakt: Bat conservation and zoonotic disease risk: a research agenda to prevent misguided persecution in the aftermath of COVID-19 COVID-19 has spread around the globe, with massive impacts on global human health, national economies and conservation activities. Conservation psychology will play a key role in changing behaviours associated with spill-over risks and in building support for bat conservation following COVID-19 (MacFarlane & Rocha, 2020). In spite of widespread recognition that bat-associated zoonotic spill-over events are largely rooted in human activities (Brierley I et al i ., 2016), bats are often presented as the culprits of viral spill-over, with real-world repercussions for conservation efforts (López-Baucells, Rocha & Fernández-Llamazares, 2018). [Extracted from the article]
Databáze: GreenFILE